Protecting Clean Water for People and Nature

We work with people all over the world to make our rivers and lakes clean, healthy and secure.

Most people in the world get our water from rivers and lakes, including the vast majority of the world’s poorest people.

But half of the world’s 500 most important rivers – water sources for hundreds of millions of people – are being seriously depleted or polluted.* Approximately 40 percent of the rivers in the U.S. are too polluted for fishing and swimming.**

Water shortages will likely be a fact of life for most people on the planet within the next ten years.*** We can’t afford to pollute and destroy our drinking water sources. But that’s exactly what we’re doing – often without knowing it.

Forests, grasslands and wetlands are nature’s water filters. They help keep erosion and pollution from flowing into our waters and they slow rainwater down, sending more water into underground supplies. But every year we lose 32 million acres of forest – that's a lot of water filters, gone, every year.

We are facing dirtier, unsafe water and more risk of water shortages and scarcity. This crisis is real, it’s happening now and it’s getting worse fast.

The Nature Conservancy partners with people and communities in all 50 states and 72 countries to protect water sources. We work on the ground to:

Prevent deforestation and destruction of grasslands – nature’s water filters

Restore forests and grasslands that have already been lost or damaged and sending erosion into our waters

Equip farmers with practical ways to keep harmful run-off out of our waters

Restore floodplains that act as sponges and send water down into groundwater supplies and filter pollution out of rivers

Create new science that helps pinpoint the greatest threats to our waters and the most effective ways to combat them

But we understand that nature won’t solve everything, so we’re finding new ways to reduce water use. More than 70 percent of water withdrawn from nature goes to agriculture, so we’re helping farmers access new technologies and practices that use less water while continuing to produce the food we need.

Below are a few examples of what The Nature Conservancy is doing to protect freshwater sources around the world.

The Nature Conservancy is a nonprofit, tax-exempt charitable organization (tax identification number 53-0242652) under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Donations are tax-deductible as allowed by law.